Multilingualism in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age: The Literary-Historical Evidence
Identifieur interne : 000445 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000444; suivant : 000446Multilingualism in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age: The Literary-Historical Evidence
Auteurs : Albrecht Classen [États-Unis]Source :
- Neophilologus [ 0028-2677 ] ; 2013.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Altdeutsche textbibliothek, Anonymous author, Arizona center, Best example, Carmina burana, Classen, Courtly, Courtly literature, Critical edition, Daily basis, Deutschen literatur, Different country, Different language, Early modern, Early modern time, English language, English translation, European middle age, Foreign language, Foreign language phrase, Fortune stabilnes, Fourteenth century, Good number, Gower, Helmbrecht, Herzog ernst, Hirzel verlag, Historical perspective, Holy land, Individuelle kommunikation, John gower, King court, Language conflict, Language difference, Language group, Late middle age, Lieder oswald, Linguistic, Linguistic challenge, Linguistic condition, Linguistic situation, Linguistic term, Literary example, Many different language, Many people, Margery kempe, Medieval latin, Medieval literature, Middle age, Middle english, Middle high german, Mother tongue, Multilingual, Multilingual condition, Multilingual situation, Multilingualism, Nineteenth century, Ninth century, Ordinary people, Oswald, Other side, Postmodern phenomenon, Regional language, Renaissance study, Robber knight, Royal couple, Same time, Seventeenth century, Subsequent century, Thirteenth century, Trans, Tristan, Vernacular, Wolkenstein, Wrong context, Zwischen babel.
Abstract
Abstract: While we tend to discuss multilingualism as a primarily modern phenomenon, that is, as the result of massive migrations all over the globe today, people in the European Middle Ages were already extensively on the move, either on crusades or pilgrimages, on business trips or attending major political or clerical meetings. Multilingualism was consequently not an unusual phenomenon. This article brings together evidence from history, the history of language, and from medieval literature at large to confirm how much the knowledge of at least one, if not two and more, foreign languages was quite common at that age. Significantly, however, a number of poets far into the seventeenth century voiced great concern about the consequences of poor foreign language skills, revealing the true extent to which multilingualism was an important matter. Generally, we can assume that the less courtly poets addressed the issue of multilingualism, the more that phenomenon must have been present already then.
Url:
DOI: 10.1007/s11061-012-9321-5
Affiliations:
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: While we tend to discuss multilingualism as a primarily modern phenomenon, that is, as the result of massive migrations all over the globe today, people in the European Middle Ages were already extensively on the move, either on crusades or pilgrimages, on business trips or attending major political or clerical meetings. Multilingualism was consequently not an unusual phenomenon. This article brings together evidence from history, the history of language, and from medieval literature at large to confirm how much the knowledge of at least one, if not two and more, foreign languages was quite common at that age. Significantly, however, a number of poets far into the seventeenth century voiced great concern about the consequences of poor foreign language skills, revealing the true extent to which multilingualism was an important matter. Generally, we can assume that the less courtly poets addressed the issue of multilingualism, the more that phenomenon must have been present already then.</div>
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